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Ángel Cabrera

Argentine golfer (born 1969)


Summary

Argentine golfer (born 1969)

FieldValue
nameÁngel Cabrera
imageAngel Cabrera by Kwee Song Lim.jpg
imagesize220px
captionCabrera in 2007
nicknameEl Pato (The Duck)
fullnameÁngel Leopoldo Cabrera
birth_date
birth_placeCórdoba, Argentina
death_date
height
weight210 lb
nationality
residenceCórdoba, Argentina
children2
yearpro1989
tourEuropean Senior Tour
extourPGA Tour
European Tour
Tour de las Américas
TPG Tour
prowins57
pgawins3
eurowins5
japwins
asiawins1
sunwins
nwidewins
champwins3
seneurowins2
otherwins47
majorwins2
mastersWon: 2009
usopenWon: 2007
openT4: 1999
pgaT19: 2000
wghofid
wghofyear
awardssection

European Tour Tour de las Américas TPG Tour Ángel Leopoldo Cabrera (; born 12 September 1969) is an Argentine professional golfer who has played on both the European Tour and PGA Tour. He is known affectionately as "El Pato" in Spanish ("The Duck") for his waddling gait. He is a two-time major champion, with wins at the U.S. Open in 2007 and the Masters in 2009; he was the first Argentine and South American to win either. He also lost in a sudden death playoff at the Masters in 2013.

Early life

Born in Córdoba, Argentina, Cabrera's father, Miguel, was a handyman, and his mother worked as a maid. He was three or four when his parents split up and was left in the care of his paternal grandmother. Cabrera stayed with her until he was 16, when he moved in a few feet away, to the house of Silvia, twelve years his senior, and a mother of four boys. They had a son, Federico, followed by another, Ángel.

When Cabrera was 10, he became a caddy at the Córdoba Country Club, which he says almost became his home. He learned golf playing against other caddies for money. His fierce determination and powerful swing soon caught the eye of members, one of whom, Juan Cruz Molina, a local real estate magnate, bought him his first set of clubs when he was 16.

With his stocky figure and habit of smoking at every hole, Cabrera cut a distinctive figure on the course. He is also acknowledged as having one of the biggest swings in the game. His son Federico became a professional golfer in 2008 and entered the PGA Tour's qualifying school in 2011, but was eliminated in the second stage. His other son, Ángel, became a professional in 2012 and joined the Canadian Tour. The elder Ángel and his sons also compete on PGA Tour Latinoamérica.

Professional career

European Tour

Cabrera turned professional at age twenty and his first three visits to the European Tour Qualifying School were unsuccessful. On his fourth trip in 1995, made with Molina's financial assistance, he qualified for membership of the European Tour in 1996. Cabrera retained his card comfortably in his first three seasons and improved substantially to tenth on the Order of Merit in 1999. He has since finished in the top 15 of the Order of Merit on seven occasions, with a best placing of fifth in 2005.

Cabrera's first European Tour win was the 2001 Argentine Open, which was sanctioned by the European Tour on a one-time basis that year. In 2005, he won the BMW Championship, the most prestigious event on the European Tour outside the majors and the World Golf Championships. However, it was only his third European Tour win, a tally which was perhaps disappointing given his consistent form on the tour. At that point, Cabrera had also won seven non-European Tour events in Latin America, where the standard of play is much lower than on the European Tour.

Cabrera featured a highest of 9th in the Official World Golf Ranking on 2 October 2005. He was the top-ranked Latin American player for a number of years before the emerging pair of Andrés Romero and Camilo Villegas won PGA Tour tournaments in 2008.

PGA Tour

Cabrera earned enough money ($623,504) on the PGA Tour in 2006 playing as a non-member to earn a tour card for 2007. He has played almost full-time in 2007, 2008, and 2009.

In 2009, Cabrera announced partnership with Gary Player Design to collaborate on a golf course design business with a focus in Latin America. This coincides with golf, the Olympics and Brazil coming together in 2016.

Cabrera won his first major championship at the 2007 U.S. Open at Oakmont near Pittsburgh. He finished the tournament at 5-over, topping runners-up Tiger Woods and Jim Furyk by one stroke. Cabrera entered the third round as the leader at even par, after finishing the first round at 1-under, and shooting 1-over on the second day. He struggled during the third round, finishing 6 strokes over par, putting him 4 strokes behind Aaron Baddeley and two behind Woods. Cabrera rebounded and came back strong on the last day. He birdied one of the longest par-3 holes in major championship history when he sank a 20 ft putt at the 8th hole, which played at a lengthy 300 yd on Sunday. Cabrera finished one stroke under par, bringing him down to 5-over (285) for the championship, just enough to secure his first career major victory. At a post-round interview Cabrera said "Well, there are some players that have psychologists, some have sportologists, I smoke."

Cabrera became the first Argentine player to win the U.S. Open and the second to win a major, joining Roberto De Vicenzo, who won the British Open in 1967 at Royal Liverpool (Hoylake). Cabrera received the 2007 Olimpia de Oro ("Golden Olympia") as Argentina's sportsperson of the year.

Cabrera won the Masters Tournament in 2009 in a three-way sudden-death playoff, seeing off Chad Campbell after the first playoff hole, and defeating Kenny Perry on the second. On the first playoff hole, the 18th, Cabrera missed right of the fairway, leaving his ball stymied directly behind a tree. On his second shot, he hit a shot right of the tree that would have sent the golf ball onto the 10th hole fairway, but ended up hitting another tree about 30 yd ahead, bouncing left and settling in the center of the 18th fairway. He and Perry both got up-and-down for par, while Campbell missed his 4 ft par putt and was eliminated. On the second playoff hole, the 10th, Cabrera made par to defeat Perry, becoming the first Argentine to win the Masters. He was the lowest-ranked golfer to win the Masters, having been ranked 69th before the tournament.

In 2011, Cabrera was in the mix to win a second Green Jacket at Augusta when he was in the final pairing on Sunday, four strokes behind leader Rory McIlroy. Cabrera was tied for the lead at one point during the afternoon, but bogeys on 12 and 16 derailed his chances. He posted a final round 71 which placed him in sole seventh, five strokes behind the South African Charl Schwartzel. This was however Cabrera's best finish in a major tournament since his win back in 2009. He missed the cut in the years other three major championships and failed to qualify for the season ending FedEx Cup playoffs, finishing 154th in the standings. His best finish of the season was a T6 in the fall season at the McGladrey Classic.

At the Masters in 2013, Cabrera was again in the final pairing on Sunday. After taking a two shot lead on the front nine, Cabrera proceeded to lose the lead and after failing to birdie the par-5 15th and was two shots behind leader Jason Day. Day then bogeyed two holes in succession and when Cabrera made a 20-foot putt for birdie at the 16th he tied Adam Scott and Day briefly for the lead. As Cabrera stood on the 18th fairway, up ahead on the green and playing in the penultimate group, Scott holed a birdie putt to take the lead. Cabrera hit a 163 yd 7-iron to 3 ft and knocked in the putt to force a playoff. On the first playoff hole, Scott's second shot was 160 yd out, but rolled back off the front of the green. Cabrera's second shot also came up short, rolling back off the green and coming to rest behind Scott's ball. Cabrera's chip just slid by the hole. Both players then made par sending them onto the 10th for the second playoff hole. Scott and Cabrera hit their tee shots in the fairway and matched each other with approach shots which landed on the green giving both birdie chances, Cabrera with 18 ft uphill and Scott a downhill right to left 12 footer. Cabrera's putt was a turn away from dropping in, giving Scott a chance to win with his putt. Scott made the putt defeating Cabrera and bringing Australia their first ever green jacket.

Although Cabrera was fully exempt on the PGA Tour, he occasionally competed in Argentinian events on PGA Tour Latinoamérica, a developmental tour in Latin America whose 2013 members included former PGA Tour winners Carlos Franco and Ted Purdy. Cabrera won the 2012 Visa Open de Argentina and the 2013 Abierto del Centro.

Cabrera won the Greenbrier Classic in West Virginia on 6 July 2014, his first PGA Tour victory since claiming the green jacket in 2009. It was his third win in the United States, but his first non-major win on the PGA Tour. Cabrera shot a six-under-par 64 on both Saturday and Sunday to secure the title, winning $1.17 million

Cabrera finished in the top-25 only twice and wound up 170th on the PGA Tour's money list.

Personal life

In January 2021, Cabrera was arrested in Brazil on an Interpol notice after leaving Argentina without court permission while facing domestic violence allegations. He was extradited in June 2021 and later convicted for assault and threats against a former partner and received a two-year prison sentence the following month. In November 2022, he was convicted again on similar charges involving another former partner and received an additional 28-month sentence. The sentences were served concurrently. Cabrera was released on parole in August 2023 after serving approximately 30 months in custody. Cabrera was cleared to play in PGA Tour-sanctioned events in December 2023.

Team appearances

Professional wins (57)

PGA Tour wins (3)

Legend
Major championships (2)
Other PGA Tour (1)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
117 Jun 2007U.S. Open69-71-76-69=285+51 strokeUSA Jim Furyk, USA Tiger Woods
212 Apr 2009Masters Tournament68-68-69-71=276−12PlayoffUSA Chad Campbell, USA Kenny Perry
36 July 2014Greenbrier Classic68-68-64-64=264−162 strokesUSA George McNeill

PGA Tour playoff record (1–1)

No.YearTournamentOpponent(s)Result
12009Masters TournamentUSA Chad Campbell, USA Kenny PerryWon with par on second extra hole
Campbell eliminated by par on first hole
22013Masters TournamentAUS Adam ScottLost to birdie on second extra hole

European Tour wins (5)

Legend
Major championships (2)
Flagship events (1)
Other European Tour (2)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
11 Apr 2001Open de Argentina167-65-69-67=268−122 strokesSWE Carl Pettersson
212 May 2002Benson & Hedges International Open68-73-68-69=278−101 strokeENG Barry Lane
329 May 2005BMW Championship70-70-66-67=273−152 strokesIRL Paul McGinley
417 Jun 2007U.S. Open69-71-76-69=285+51 strokeUSA Jim Furyk, USA Tiger Woods
512 Apr 2009Masters Tournament68-68-69-71=276−12PlayoffUSA Chad Campbell, USA Kenny Perry

1Co-sanctioned by the PGA of Argentina Tour

European Tour playoff record (1–2)

No.YearTournamentOpponent(s)Result
12005Deutsche Bank Players Championship of EuropeSWE Niclas FasthLost to birdie on third extra hole
22009Masters TournamentUSA Chad Campbell, USA Kenny PerryWon with par on second extra hole
Campbell eliminated by par on first hole
32013Masters TournamentAUS Adam ScottLost to birdie on second extra hole

Asian Tour wins (1)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victoryRunner-up
14 Nov 2007Barclays Singapore Open71-63-70-72=276−81 strokeFJI Vijay Singh

PGA Tour Latinoamérica wins (2)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
116 Dec 2012Visa Open de Argentina65-70-71-64=270−184 strokesARG Miguel Ángel Carballo, MEX Óscar Fraustro
221 Apr 2013Abierto OSDE del Centro72-72-76-64=284EPlayoffARG Rafael Gómez

Tour de las Américas wins (8)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
129 Nov 1999Torneo de Maestros Telefónica271−13USA Scott Dunlap, ARG Fabian Montovia,
ITA Costantino Rocca
29 Dec 2001Torneo de Maestros Telefónica (2)66-65-72-69=272−122 strokesARG Eduardo Romero
31 Dec 2002Abierto de Argentina70-62-68-69=269−114 strokesARG José Cóceres
41 Feb 2004Abierto del Sur165-69-69-67=270−101 strokeARG Miguel Guzmán
56 Nov 2005Torneo de Maestros1 (3)66-74-70-68=278−63 strokesARG Julio Zapata
615 Apr 2006Abierto Visa del Centro168-67-70-70=275−9PlayoffARG Eduardo Romero
715 Apr 2007Abierto Visa del Centro266-75-73-65=279−52 strokesPAR Raúl Fretes
827 Oct 2007Torneo de Maestros2 (4)68-73-71-65=277−7PlayoffARG Ricardo González

1Co-sanctioned by the PGA of Argentina Tour

2Co-sanctioned by the TPG Tour

TPG Tour wins (4)

No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victoryRunner-up
115 Apr 2007Abierto Visa del Centro166-75-73-65=279−52 strokesPAR Raúl Fretes
227 Oct 2007Torneo de Maestros168-73-71-65=277−7PlayoffARG Ricardo González
322 Dec 2012Ángel Cabrera Classic70-68-66-71=275−136 strokesARG Ricardo González
414 Dec 2013Ángel Cabrera Classic (2)72-62-69-67=270−18PlayoffARG Miguel Ángel Carballo

Argentine Tour wins (23)

  • 1991 San Diego Grand Prix
  • 1992 Norpatagonico Open
  • 1994 Villa Gessel Grand Prix, South Open, Center Open, Nautico Hacoaj Grand Prix
  • 1995 Abierto del Litoral
  • 1996 South Open, Santiago del Estero Open
  • 1997 Center Open
  • 1998 Argentine PGA Championship
  • 2000 Center Open, Bariloche Match Play, Desafio de Maestros
  • 2001 Center Open, Argentine Open1
  • 2002 Argentine PGA Championship
  • 2004 South Open2, North Open
  • 2005 Center Open, North Open, Argentine Masters2
  • 2006 Center Open2 1Co-sanctioned by the European Tour

2Co-sanctioned by the Tour de las Américas

Cordoba Tour wins (6)

  • 2001 (2) Ascochingas Tournament, La Cumbre Tournament
  • 2002 (2) Rio Cuarto Tournament, Las Delicias Tournament
  • 2008 (1) Cordoba PGA Championship
  • 2009 (1) Angel Cabrera Tour 2nd Tournament

Other wins (9)

  • 1995 (2) Paraguay Open, El Rodeo Open (Colombia)
  • 1996 (2) Volvo Masters of Latin America (Brazil), Viña del Mar Open (Chile)
  • 1998 (1) Brazil Open
  • 1999 (1) Brazil Open
  • 2007 (1) PGA Grand Slam of Golf
  • 2009 (1) Gary Player Invitational (with Tony Johnstone)
  • 2017 (1) PNC Father-Son Challenge (with Ángel Jr.)

PGA Tour Champions wins (3)

Legend
PGA Tour Champions major championships (2)
Other PGA Tour Champions (1)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
16 Apr 2025James Hardie Pro-Football Hall of Fame Invitational68-66-71=205−112 strokesKOR K. J. Choi
219 May 2025Regions Tradition70-67-67-64=268−201 strokeUSA Jerry Kelly
325 May 2025Senior PGA Championship72-69-70-69=280−81 strokeDEN Thomas Bjørn, IRL Pádraig Harrington

European Senior Tour wins (2)

Legend
Senior major championships (1)
Other European Senior Tour (1)
No.DateTournamentWinning scoreTo parMargin of
victoryRunner(s)-up
116 Jun 2024Paul Lawrie Matchplay3 and 1ZAF James Kingston
225 May 2025Senior PGA Championship72-69-70-69=280−81 strokeDEN Thomas Bjørn, IRL Pádraig Harrington

Major championships

Wins (2)

YearChampionship54 holesWinning scoreMarginRunners-up
2007U.S. Open4 shot deficit+5 (69-71-76-69=285)1 strokeUSA Jim Furyk, USA Tiger Woods
2009Masters TournamentTied for lead−12 (68-68-69-71=276)Playoff1USA Chad Campbell, USA Kenny Perry

1Defeated Kenny Perry and Chad Campbell in a sudden-death playoff: Cabrera (4-4), Perry (4-5) and Campbell (5).

Results timeline

Tournament199719981999
Masters Tournament
U.S. Open
The Open ChampionshipT51T4
PGA ChampionshipT41
Tournament2000200120022003200420052006200720082009
Masters TournamentCUTT10T9T15CUTCUTT8T37T251
U.S. OpenT37T7T66T3516T33T261CUTT54
The Open ChampionshipCUTCUTCUTT22CUT734CUTT24
PGA ChampionshipT19T37T48T45CUTCUTCUTT20T63
Tournament201020112012201320142015201620172018
Masters TournamentT187T322CUTT22T24CUTCUT
U.S. OpenT22CUTT46CUTCUTT64T37CUT
The Open ChampionshipCUTCUTCUTT11T19
PGA ChampionshipCUTCUTCUTWDWD
Tournament2019202020212022202320242025
Masters TournamentCUTCUT
PGA Championship
U.S. Open
The Open Championship

WD = withdrew

CUT = missed the half way cut

"T" indicates a tie for a place.

Summary

TournamentWins2nd3rdTop-5Top-10Top-25EventsCuts madeTotals210410237041
Masters Tournament11026112113
PGA Championship000002157
U.S. Open1001241813
The Open Championship000126168
  • Most consecutive cuts made – 7 (2008 PGA – 2010 U.S. Open)
  • Longest streak of top-10s – 2 (2001 Masters – 2001 U.S. Open)

Results in The Players Championship

Tournament200120022003200420052006200720082009
The Players ChampionshipT26T36CUTCUTCUTCUTT14
Tournament201020112012201320142015
The Players ChampionshipCUTT41WDT55T38WD

CUT = missed the half-way cut

WD = withdrew

"T" indicates a tie for a place.

Results in World Golf Championships

Tournament1999200020012002200320042005200620072008200920102011201220132014
Match PlayR64R64R32R32R32R64QFR64R64
ChampionshipT25T17NT1T36T16T18T26T19WDT50
InvitationalT19T23T4T41T4T69T36T4T33T38T31
Champions

1Cancelled due to 9/11

QF, R16, R32, R64 = Round in which player lost in match play

"T" = tied

NT = No tournament

Note that the HSBC Champions did not become a WGC event until 2009.

Senior major championships

Wins (2)

YearChampionship54 holesWinning scoreMarginRunner(s)-up
2025Regions Tradition3 shot deficit−20 (70-67-67-64=268)1 strokeUSA Jerry Kelly
2025Senior PGA ChampionshipTied for lead−8 (72-69-70-69=280)1 strokeDEN Thomas Bjørn, IRL Pádraig Harrington

Results timeline

Results not in chronological order

Tournament202020212022202320242025
The TraditionNT1
Senior PGA ChampionshipNT1
Senior Players ChampionshipT70T17T21
U.S. Senior OpenNTCUT
Senior British Open ChampionshipNTT5T31

CUT = missed the halfway cut

"T" indicates a tie for a place

NT = no tournament due to COVID-19 pandemic

Team appearances

References

References

  1. [http://golf.fanhouse.com/2009/04/12/angel-cabrera-wins-the-2009-masters/ Angel Cabrera Wins the 2009 Masters]
  2. "Angel Cabrera – Tournament Wins". PGA European Tour.
  3. [https://wayback.archive-it.org/all/20070630214452/http://dps.twiihosting.net/wgr/doc/content/archive/2005/owgr40f2005.pdf Official World Golf Ranking – 2 October 2005]
  4. [http://dps.endavadigital.net/owgr/doc/content/2007%20Stats/86TO0810.pdf 69 Players Who Have Reached The Top-10 In World Ranking]
  5. (2 October 2009). "Cabrera to develop courses with Gary Player Design". PGA Tour.
  6. [https://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/golf/6762493.stm Cabrera disbelief at US Open win], BBC, 18 June 2007.
  7. (3 January 2008). "Cabrera named Argentine Sportsperson of the Year". [[PGA European Tour]].
  8. (12 April 2009). "Masters 2009". BBC Sport.
  9. (6 July 2014). "Cabrera wins Greenbrier Classic". ESPN.
  10. (15 January 2021). "Angel Cabrera: Masters winner arrested in Brazil and faces extradition to Argentina".
  11. (18 March 2021). "Solicitud formal—Todavía detenido en Brasil, el golfista Ángel Cabrera pidió ser extraditado a la Argentina".
  12. (8 July 2021). "Angel Cabrera: Former Masters and US Open champion jailed in Argentina". BBC Sport.
  13. (7 July 2021). "Golfer Angel Cabrera sentenced to 2 years in prison for assaulting former partner". ESPN.
  14. (7 November 2022). "Argentine Golf Champion Cabrera Sentenced Again For Assault". Barron's.
  15. Fernando Llosa, Luis. (8 August 2023). "Angel Cabrera to be released from prison after serving 30 months".
  16. (19 December 2023). "Angel Cabrera cleared to return to PGA Tour after prison". ESPN.
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